Most people don't realize the degree to which the Carib heritage has been
incorporated into the modern world.

Take some of the most common English words.The following are all derived
from the Carib language: “hammock” (a Carib invention), “canoe,” “tobacco,”
“potato,” “hurricane” and “barbecue.”

Yes, barbecuing--the smoking of meat over fire--was another Carib innovation.
And of course there's that term Caribbean.

Ironically, over the centuries the Caribs have seen their own language disappear.
In 1853 a priest noted that the Caribs spoke just a few words of their language.

English and the local Creole were becoming the new tongues. It's believed
that the last fluent speakers of Carib died almost a century ago.

For Chief Joseph, restoring the Carib language will be difficult if not impossible.
He says that although the meanings of a few Carib phrases are still remembered,
“the island Carib language has been lost. We will have to find a language
to adopt.”